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Service-Learning to Advance Access & Success: Bridging Institutional and Community Capacity [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 366 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x19 mm, weight: 514 g
  • Sērija : Advances in Service-Learning Research
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Nov-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1641134747
  • ISBN-13: 9781641134743
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  • Cena: 67,72 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 366 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x19 mm, weight: 514 g
  • Sērija : Advances in Service-Learning Research
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Nov-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1641134747
  • ISBN-13: 9781641134743
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Throughout the 90s and early 2000s, service-learning research was intensely focused on the student outcomes. That body of research has effectively brought service-learning from the fringes into the mainstream of institutionalized pedagogies. In the past decade service-learning research has experienced an infusion of exploration in three distinct ways: first, large-scale quantitative methodologies; second, a proliferation of research that has explored how different sub-groups of students experience the pedagogy differently, thusly resulting in variation among outcomes; and third, a focus on the experiences and outcomes associated for communities and community partners engaged in service-learning.

In an effort to support these movements, this volume of the Advances in Service-Learning Research series, Service-Learning to Advance Access & Success: Bridging Institutional and Community Capacity, focuses on how service-learning can advance access and success. Not simply access and success of students, but the ways that service-learning can advance access and success for all through bridging institutional and community capacity building. The chapters in this volume serve as a testament to the ways in which service-learning research continue to be advanced by thoughtful scholar-practitioners.

The 12 chapters included in this volume are organized into three sections. The first section focuses on how institutional and community partnerships can be leveraged to build community capacity. The second section focuses on how institutions might build their own capacity to effect change for the good of society. The third and final section focuses on six studies exploring the relationship service-learning pedagogy has with access and success for students. Of the six studies, three are situated within the context of teacher-preparation programs.
Foreword ix
Introduction xi
Acknowledgments xvii
SECTION I COLLABORATION TO BUILD COMMUNITY CAPACITY
1 An Assessment Framework for Embedding Significant and Sustainable Activity-Based, Course-Based, and Program-Based Service-Learning
3(28)
Rebecca Pearson
Naomi Jeffery Peterson
2 Building Community Capacity Through University-City Collaborations: A Case Study of the Austin City Hall Fellows Program
31(22)
Chloe Latham Sikes
Trade Lowe
Suchitra V. Gururaj
3 Building Communication Capacities Within Nonprofits Through Service-Learning
53(22)
Dennis McCunney
Guiseppe Getto
SECTION II INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY TO ACHIEVE CHANGE
4 Transforming Institutional Capacity for Community-Based Learning: Leveraging Engaged Department Initiatives Into a Campus-Wide Community of Practice
75(24)
Danielle Lake
Karyn E. Rabourn
Nicholas O. Scobey
Gloria Mileva
5 Co-Creating Service-Learning: The Importance of True Partnerships
99(24)
Julianne Gassman
Emily J. Shields
Katie Kleinhesselink
Elaine K. Ikeda
6 The Community-Based Learning Coordinator Model: Investing in Infrastructure for Community Impact Through Service-Learning
123(28)
Connie Snyder Mick
Annie Cahill Kelly
Sam Centellas
SECTION III ADVANCING STUDENT ACCESS AND SUCCESS
7 Addressing the Problem With Service: Community Formation, Democratization, and Community-Based Learning Pedagogy
151(32)
R. Tyler Derreth
8 Learning to Collaborate: Intersections of the Classroom and Community
183(30)
Patricia M. Ryan
Shirley M. Matteson
Valerie O. Paton
9 Planting Seeds Through Service: A Qualitative Approach to Assessing Student Civic Learning Through Community Partnerships
213(28)
Laura Martin
Albert Nylander
Lakyre'a Janae Owens
10 Advancing Democracy in Teacher Education: Service-Learning in Third Space Partnerships
241(42)
Michael Kopish
11 Rethinking Teacher Education: Lessons Learned From a Mandatory Community-Based Service-Learning Program
283(26)
Gary Harfitt
Jessie Mei Ling Chow
12 Preservice EFL Teachers' Perceptions and Their Reflected Experiences in a Service-Learning Course
309(26)
Yasemin Kirkgoz
Summary Epilogue 335(2)
Alan S. Tinkler
About the Editors 337(2)
About the Contributors 339
Travis T. York, Association of Public & Land-grant Universities

Alan S. Tinkler, University of Vermont

Barri E. Tinkler, University of Vermont